Graphesis

Visual Forms of Knowledge Production

Graphesis provides a descriptive critical language for the analysis of graphical knowledge.
Time
Host
Location
global
Picture of Graphesis

We now take in more information through visual means than at any point in history. Johanna Drucker insists that learning to interpret how visual forms not only present but produce knowledge has become an essential skill in our current screen-saturated culture, in which the computers and smart phones that constantly flood us with images do more than simply convey information, they structure our relationship to information through graphical formats.

In an interdisciplinary study fusing digital humanities with media studies and graphic design history, Drucker outlines the principles by which visual formats organize meaningful content. Among the most significant of these formats is the graphical user interface (GUI)—the dominant feature of the screens of nearly all consumer electronic devices. Because so much of our personal and professional lives is mediated through visual interfaces, it is important to start thinking critically about how they shape knowledge, our behavior, and even our identity.

Drucker makes the case for studying visuality from a humanistic perspective, exploring how graphic languages can serve fields where qualitative judgments take priority over quantitative statements of fact. Graphesis offers a new epistemology of the ways we process information, embracing the full potential of visual forms and formats of knowledge production.